KIEV, Ukraine— Around a thousand people turned up on Sunday
for Ukraine's first major gay pride march which was held amid tight security
measures in the capital Kiev.
Several thousand police forces were guarding the procession
in central Kiev and the rally was peaceful despite far-right groups making
threats last week to attack it.
"The road to equality in Ukraine is difficult as well
as dangerous," Bohdan Hloba, one of the rally's organizers, said. "We
have been threatened with a 'bloodbath' but every step of this march gives us
hope."
Authorities sanctioned gay rights marches when the new
pro-Western government came into power after the 2014 revolution, but earlier
gatherings have been small and have come under attack from far-right groups.
The Kiev city police cordoned off nine streets and closed
one subway station Sunday to ensure tight security and prevent clashes. A few
anti-gay activists did get in, however, although they were not violent.
"I'm against gay propaganda that these sick people have
organized here in collusion with authorities," said Serhiy Hashchenko, a
56-year-old father of 12 who went to the march carrying a placard "Ukraine
is no Sodom."
Ultra-nationalist radicals who have threatened to disperse
the march were watching it from the security perimeter lined with riot police.
Ukrainian police chief Khatiya Dekanoizdze said the police
was following ultra-nationalist groups and detained 57 people before and during
the rally.
Last year, a gay pride march in Kiev was called off less
than half an hour after it began as right-wing activists pelted the marchers
with smoke grenades.
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